‘The Goldfinch’ by Donna Tartt

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, judges describe ‘The Goldfinch’ as a beautifully written coming-of-age novel with exquisitely drawn characters. With this I agree completely. Somehow having missed Tartt’s much acclaimed earlier novels, I picked up ‘The Goldfinch’ tentatively because it has had such mixed reviews. It seems you either really love her books or you really don’t. Although I am now firmly planted in the first camp, I can understand how this book would not be for everyone. And just because it won a prize, doesn’t mean it will appeal to all. See earlier post. It didn’t win the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction which surprised me. I would have thought the winner would be Burial Rites, Americanah, or this one. But as a fellow book blogger so eloquently put it, “they never seem to pick the ones I like!”

The story is based on a small exquisitely drawn painting of a goldfinch on a perch, by Carel Fabritius who was one of Rembrandt’s most gifted students. What you notice when you look closely, is that the bird is chained to its post, adding pathos to the representation. Who owns it? Why is it chained? The goldfinch is so central to the novel that it becomes like a character in itself.

An interesting historical note about the painter Carel Fabritius: he was killed in the Delft gunpowder explosion of 1654 which destroyed a quarter of the city, along with his studio and many of his paintings. It’s not a coincidence that Tartt’s story contains an explosion in a museum where artwork is destroyed or that the novel begins and ends in Holland.

‘The Goldfinch’ tells the story of Theo Decker, a young boy whose life is rocked by a terrible tragedy, an explosion in a museum that kills his mother and creates an encounter with a dying elderly man and the small Fabritius painting. From there the story follows Theo through a host of homes and experiences that lead him ultimately to the very underbelly of crime and art theft. His journey is one that I thoroughly enjoyed, mostly because of Donna Tartt’s writing.

I think the book should have been shorter, because it would then be accessible to more people. Many will not have patience for almost 800 pages when there’s not as much action as there is beautiful writing. Certainly things happen in the novel, even shocking things, but I would not describe it as a page turner, even though I couldn’t put it down and didn’t want it to end. To me it was a work of art in itself and as unforgettable as a famous painting.

7 responses to “‘The Goldfinch’ by Donna Tartt”

Thank you for braving this for us Joanne. I loved The Secret History but read it long ago, in a galaxy far far away (can i trust the judgement of the person I was 20 years ago?) I’ve started The Goldfinch twice but it’s tone and length are daunting- from your review it appears to merit some tenacity. So I’ll take a deep breath and forge ahead-